On the night of July 16, 1942, 4,500 gendarmes of the collaborationist government of Marshal Pétain, who had signed a pact with Hitler and accepted the occupation of France by the German army, carried out a gigantic roundup in Paris, in which 13,152 Jews They were arrested and subsequently locked up, in inhumane conditions, in the Winter Velodrome. It was planned to arrest 27,391 Jews, but, although the majority of the French were collaborationists, a minority participated in the Resistance, both passive and active, against the invader. The civil disobedience of many citizens and some officials allowed a good part of those who had previously been booked and marked with the yellow star to escape.
https://dvdstorespain.es/en/films/86006-la-redada-blu-ray--8421394414020.html86006La redada [Blu-ray]<div id="productDescription" class="a-section a-spacing-small"><br/><p><span>On the night of July 16, 1942, 4,500 gendarmes of the collaborationist government of Marshal Pétain, who had signed a pact with Hitler and accepted the occupation of France by the German army, carried out a gigantic roundup in Paris, in which 13,152 Jews They were arrested and subsequently locked up, in inhumane conditions, in the Winter Velodrome. It was planned to arrest 27,391 Jews, but, although the majority of the French were collaborationists, a minority participated in the Resistance, both passive and active, against the invader. The civil disobedience of many citizens and some officials allowed a good part of those who had previously been booked and marked with the yellow star to escape.</span></p></div>https://dvdstorespain.es/440201-home_default/la-redada-blu-ray-.jpg7.4298instockDivisa Home Video7.42987.4298002020-09-30T00:39:13+0200/Start/Start/Blu-Ray/Start/Films/Start/New
On the night of July 16, 1942, 4,500 gendarmes of the collaborationist government of Marshal Pétain, who had signed a pact with Hitler and accepted the occupation of France by the German army, carried out a gigantic roundup in Paris, in which 13,152 Jews They were arrested and subsequently locked up, in inhumane conditions, in the Winter Velodrome. It was planned to arrest 27,391 Jews, but, although the majority of the French were collaborationists, a minority participated in the Resistance, both passive and active, against the invader. The civil disobedience of many citizens and some officials allowed a good part of those who had previously been booked and marked with the yellow star to escape.